Did a fresh installation by choosing btrfs. Everything went well BUT when I've tried booting the machine for the first time after the installation, fsck tried to check my disk and couldn't check it out and the system wouldn't boot. I've done a new installation with ext4 in the end

Besides that I've install LMDE XFCE over Mageia on my nephew's pc. It's faster and simply lovely. Keep up the good work. God bless you devs

Interesting. I've never been able to get LMDE 201204 to format to btrfs using the installer which is why I went the route in the link above.I actually had to check and see if there was a respin of LMDE after you mentioned latest iso.

btrfs option is always greyed out when I use the installer.

By using the above tut, I'm also able to build a btrfs @ system that spans multiple drives:subvolumes / and /vm on an SSD and /home on a second HDD, all under @

Waiting for the day we have a true btrfs installer packaged with the distro!

melbo wrote:Interesting. I've never been able to get LMDE 201204 to format to btrfs using the installer which is why I went the route in the link above.I actually had to check and see if there was a respin of LMDE after you mentioned latest iso.

btrfs option is always greyed out when I use the installer.

By using the above tut, I'm also able to build a btrfs @ system that spans multiple drives:subvolumes / and /vm on an SSD and /home on a second HDD, all under @

Waiting for the day we have a true btrfs installer packaged with the distro!

Strange. I do however format the drive through GParted first, with btrfs. And when running installer it is not greyed out for me. I checked image I'm using and yes, dated same as yours, cinnamon/mate

I had no problems installing LMDE on btrfs.After installation just boot Live CD again, and edit fstab on hdd (set btrfs partitions error checking for example to 0 0).

That said,1) if you are running btrfs you should always be using newest possible kernel. 3.2 is quite ancient already - go for 3.6. BTRFS is gaining many important upgrades and fixes every kernel release.2) performance will be most probably inferior to ext4 and getting worse as drive gets filled and fragmented (due to copy-on-write and garbage collector)3) you'll lose about 2GB on each partition (btrfs reserves it).4) make backups as there is no working fsck yet. afair clonezilla cannot backup partitions compressed by btrfs-lzo, just btrfs-zip or uncompressed.